Thursday, May 2, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Qatari investor close to taking stake in SolarWorld -CEO

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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UPDATE 1-Qatari investor close to taking stake in SolarWorld -CEO
May 2nd 2013, 15:08

Thu May 2, 2013 11:08am EDT

* Step could speed up turnaround of debt-ridden company

* SolarWorld CEO says to publish potential stake size at EGM

* Qatar Solar Technologies (QSTec) willing to buy minority -source

* SolarWorld owns 29 pct in QSTec (Adds information from source on potential buyer, background)

DUESSELDORF, Germany, May 2 (Reuters) - Debt-laden SolarWorld is close to securing financial backing from a Qatari investor, its chief executive said on Thursday, the second major move in a week in its efforts to get back on its feet.

"We will publish the size of the potential stake at the extraordinary general meeting," Frank Asbeck, nicknamed the "sun king" by solar industry media, told Reuters on Thursday, declining to name the investor.

One source familiar with the process said that Qatar Solar Technologies (QSTec), a previous joint venture between SolarWorld and the Qatar Foundation, was willing to take a minority stake in what was once Germany's largest solar company.

SolarWorld holds 29 percent of QSTec, and the Qatar Foundation 70 percent. The remaining 1 percent is owned by the Qatar Development Bank.

QSTec was not immediately available for comment.

Earlier this week, SolarWorld said it reached a preliminary deal on restructuring its 1.2 billion euros ($1.6 billion) debt load, including a debt-to-equity swap that would hand its creditors most of the ailing solar group.

According to Thomson Reuters data, some of SolarWorld's biggest bondholders in the company include GFC Advisers LLC, Do Investment AG and Pioneer Investment Management Ltd.

Solar companies have suffered from massive overcapacity of cells and modules, driving many sector players out of the market or into the arms of foreign buyers.

Last year, Q-Cells, once the world's top maker of solar cells, was bought up by South Korea's Hanwha, while Solon was acquired by United Arab Emirates-based Microsol.

($1 = 0.7580 euros) (Reporting by Anneli Palmen, Alexander Huebner and Regan Doherty; Writing by Christoph Steitz; Editing by Ralf Banser and Patrick Graham)

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